NASA Earth Observations (comp.)20180222021817-0500Bathymetry (GEBCO)raster digital datahttp://neo.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov/view.php?datasetId=GEBCO_BATHYBeneath the waters of the world's ocean, the Earth's surface isn't flat like the bottom of a glass or large bowl. There are giant mountain ranges and huge cracks where the ocean floor is ripping apart. Underwater volcanoes are slowly building up into mountains that may one day rise above the sea surface as islands. Because of these features, the depth of the water isn't the same everywhere in the ocean. Bathymetry is the measurement of how deep the water is at various places and the shape of the land underwater. In these maps, different shades of color represent different water depths. The data come from the General Bathymetric Chart of the Oceans, produced by the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) and the United Nations' (UNESCO) Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC).]]>To make image representations of these data easily accessible.20020101ground conditionCompleteAnnualy-180.0180.090.0-90.0NoneAtmosphereOceanLandLifeEnergyNoneNoneImage by Reto Stockli, NASA's Earth Observatory, using GEBCO Bathymetric Grid courtesy NOAA.RasterPixel0.10.1Decimal degrees20180222Kevin WardScience Systems and Applications, Inc. / NASA Goddard Space Flight CenterNEO Architect & DevelopermailingNASA GSFC, Code 613GreenbeltMD20771USA+1 503 246 1608kevin.a.ward@nasa.govFGDC Content Standard for Digital Geospatial Metadata1998universal timenonenone